Studying My Masters in 1/6th of the Time
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- čas přidán 13. 11. 2021
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In this video, I do a demonstration with a few of the components of my study system. Using this system, I was able to study for my Master's semester in about 1/6th of the normal estimated time. I was able to achieve High Distinction and my work was categorised as an exemplar.
The focus is on creating that high quality encoding which forms that stable foundation for future learning.
I demonstrate the use of "chunking" which is shown to bypass working memory capacity limitations and how this integrates with "chunkmapping", the variation of mindmapping that I teach. There are also a number of other techniques that I use, which other videos will individually focus on, but this shows an overview of how the system can come together.
The key areas of challenge for beginners doing this are:
- Insecurity at not writing so many notes
- Insecurity at not writing linear notes
- Discomfort from the chunking and encoding process (cognitive load which you may not be used to) - this discomfort can be misinterpreted as bad, whereas it can actually be the total opposite, where the normal, passive learning which was very comfortable was just a waste of time.
- Proper chunkmapping technique
- Evaluating the quality of chunks and chunk structures
- Breaking framing bias when doing syntopical reading
I will endeavour to cover each of these in other videos to come.
If you enjoyed what I had to give or found it valuable, a subscribe would be sincerely appreciated.
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Justin Sung is an ex-junior doctor who is passionate about creating efficient and meaningful change. He believes that a culture of spoon-feeding and tutoring is a societal issue and that most people are not making good career decisions - especially around medicine. He has worked with thousands of students for over 10 years, teaching them to manage their studies and time more efficiently using evidence-based and rigorously field-tested techniques.
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Instagram: bit.ly/drjustinsung
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It’s absolutely criminal that we spend this much time in school and no one spends 1/100th of that time teaching us the science of learning.
That's cuz no one knows. The collective knowledge on learning effectively in society really ain't high yet. But it's gonna increase and it will eventually be implemented in the education systems.
Yeah man it always bugged me in high school.
Most public school is for teaching people how to be good wage slaves.
No money in that. One day the materialism will end, when we have anything we could want in the blink of an eye
ahh capitalism
*For more visibility* *I may not have understood accurately* *Only to refer*
I'm adding my inference of a bunch of Justin's videos(Following Christi) below for everyone's benefit.
ON NOTE-TAKING:
Step 1 - Reduce the number of words in notes. Break the idea of perfect sentences and focus more on perfect LEARNING.
You need to be uncomfortable about the amount of time you waste on just listening to/reading lectures and not learning and retaining (which I am)
So you always strive to be more efficient.
Step 2 - Delay Note-Taking process - Start by writing notes for only one paragraph, then for two paragraphs, and reduce in a phased manner.
So there is more time you give to(in your head): (Being capable to retain and conceptually working through the information in head)
1. Conflicting ideas - Resolving
2. Associating and Relating what you learnt
3. Digesting the concept
And then putting this new understanding of yours on paper.
So if you are listening/reading a lecture and at a point you are uncomfortable and think I have to put this down, just delay it a little bit more and then put it on paper. So at one point, albeit slowly, you don't write anymore.
'Just gonna read a little bit more and then I write my notes'
Step 3 - Get rid of lined paper. Mind Map. Making information non-linear.
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Ideal Combination of Study Tools - Mind Maps(for the logical and conceptual) + Flash Cards(for random information)- Incorporate this with Spaced Repetition and make it magical.
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HOW TO ACTIVE READ?
1. Before reading a paragraph, ask the question WHY? And WHAT AM I GETTING OUT OF THIS? - By doing this you are identifying the GAPS of knowledge to fill.
2. This may lead you to read haphazardly, because you are going to be going through only information that is required to fill the gap.
3. Once you filled the gap, you then think of the next gap of knowledge that needs to be filled and repeat the process.
Have a Detective-like mindset when going through the reading.
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What should be going on in your Mind while Learning?
1. Trying actively to SPATIALLY ARRANGE the concepts in your head.
2. Make room to see how they flow together.
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HOW TO ATTEND A LECTURE?
Step 1 - Know the topic of the lecture beforehand and Prime yourself over the information.
Step -2 - Make a Skeletal Mind map of what you understood from the Priming.
Step -3 (In the lecture) - I'll be testing this logic(of skeletal mind map) and add the concepts and important details, while I am APPLYING and SIMPLIFYING. *You have hold in your head what the teacher is saying while doing all of this.(cognitive threshold, I believe, which is probably very low for me)
At the end, you are Chunking the information and then LINKING it to your existing knowledge.
Step - 4 - If all of that becomes too much in the head (about to cross your cognitive threshold), when you feel you can't hold on to it, you then represent what model you've built in your head so far on paper. And then continue from there again in your head.
Step - 5 - Now during this process, you are going to be missing out on a lot of other details, the not-so-important-but-may-be-relevant stuff and also the random factual information to remember, for this another 1 hour may be given separately to 'mop' up all the remaining information.
Thanks bro very much helpful
Brother please can you tell name of christi channel name would be very useful
@@sohamgawande6100 Brother, Christi Mari Labiste is someone who made a comment like this below in this video only. Scroll down and see the name, bro.
@@suryaprabhatpali3013 thanks 😊
amazing points, thanks for the add-ons about psychological tips too (like being uncomfortable about the time spent listening to the lecture, as opposed to thinking it's good to stay and study)
Justin be flexing on us mortals with these youtube titles.
Right fucking smart people inventing stuff and stuff.
Mortals 😭
He is pretty good at explaining things in a way that mere mortals can understand, though...
It's ok, guys. Through these videos we too will ascend.
@@nomadicwolf6132
This guy.
_He_ gets it!
Important concepts:
3:12 Pre-study
4:52 Mental Schema
6:50 Outline (Big Picture)
7:50 Cognitive Load Theory
11:38 Active Chunking
15:33 High Order Learning
17:51 Space Repetition
Thank you for saving time 🙏
THnkxx
oh, thank you for saving time. I don't know why Justin beats around the bush like those junk youtube channels
@@zara5325 ha ha🤣🤣. Hope Jusin reads your comments & put timestamps in description of his future videos 😀
@@zara5325 on the contrary, i find the extra context he talk about (or as you say, "beating around the bush") to be insightful as well 😅
*Summary*
*1. Consider different study techniques, including mind mapping.* Explore various study techniques and be open to trying different methods, including mind mapping, to find what works best for you.
*2. Use study techniques as part of a wider system.* Think about how your chosen study technique fits into your overall learning system and how it can help facilitate other parts of that system.
*3. Identify and improve rate-limiting steps.* Identify areas in your learning system that may be holding you back and work to improve them to prevent the entire process from being slowed down.
*4. Diversify learning methods.* Avoid relying solely on active recall and space repetition for learning as it may not lead to success in later academic and professional years. Incorporate other learning methods as well.
*5. Encode information properly.* Encode information properly to make retrieval easier later on. This includes organizing and categorizing information effectively.
*6. Utilize the way the brain works.* Understand how the brain works and use this knowledge to develop a wider system of learning that works effectively for any subject.
*7. Avoid improper encoding.* Improper encoding, combined with lots of active recall and space repetition, can lead to a repetitive and unnecessarily time-consuming learning process.
*8. Read multiple articles on the topic.* Read multiple articles on the topic you are studying to gain a more comprehensive understanding.
*9. Use a metaphor to mentally organize information.* Use metaphors, such as organizing a room or warehouse, to help mentally organize the information you are learning.
*10. Create a mental schema.* Focus on creating a mental schema that categorizes and organizes information effectively. Break down the information into big and sub-chunks and figure out how they relate to each other.
*11. Work through discomfort.* Cognitive load theory suggests that discomfort and a sense of overwhelmingness while learning is good for growth and learning speed. Embrace discomfort and work through it to gain a deeper understanding.
*12. Consolidate information with syntopical reading.* Use syntopical reading to consolidate information from various sources and create a clear structure and organization to help learn the material.
*13. Use active chunking.* Use active chunking techniques to manage important points to learn about starting an intervention for a child with autism.
*14. Prioritize higher order learning.* Higher order learning, which involves organizing information effectively, is more effective than passive learning.
*15. Supplement with memorization aids and flashcards.* Supplement your learning system with memorization aids and flashcards to help encode information and make retrieval easier.
up
Here I am, an avid Anki user in my 6 or 7th flashcard burnout, trying to figure out how to effectively use Obsidian and going down of rabbit hole of Zettelkatsen and note taking techniques, and this man is using drawn images and the notepad app..... It's truly time I rethink the way I learn.
Try LogSeq, a Markdown based Outliner. I use it for the priming (scoping subject) phase. Outliners shine at Chunking if properly used. I use Obsidian for Long Form text. You can use both!.
My method at school was what you just showed but without any mind maps or writing of any sort. All I did was read and think about what I read. Then I'd need to only do one revision session the night before an exam that'd take about 15 minutes to bring the previously encoded information to the surface of my consciousness. Everyone wondered how I did so well when it looked like I did nothing. I had no idea then, but now I see how.
But how did you keep that information in your head. Like I know what you mean. Back then when I was in middle-school to and I never had to study that much. However now the amount of information has increased and I can't hold on to it for that long.
@@sir.wombat3134You wanna see the topic as something obvious once you've encoded it, at least that's what works for me, asking ChatGPT to create a simple analogy for the topic that you're studying is helpful too.
@@sir.wombat3134Justin explained pretty well on how to do it. He has other videos on other methods.
@@sir.wombat3134 you have to create a mental structure of the information in a way that makes sense to you
Mentira mano vc acredita nesses caras @@sir.wombat3134
Exams are going on for me so this is incredibly helpful for me
I've used a system similar to this one for the two exams that I have taken until now and, although it is very time consuming, my retention has been really good.
Justin, I can't express how grateful I am for your videos. Thank you SO much for showing us this whole new world of learning 🙏
I like what you are saying. I am happy to find other people who are also actively trying to figure out a better way of doing things
I've been eagerly waiting for your new content and you, my friend, do not disappoint!!
Thank you sir for all the value you provide on this channel. I will use all of these to help my family and my community and change our lives for the better :)
I’m taking the ics course and it’s SO helpful, I love complementing it w Justin’s channel too
In this video, I do a demonstration with a few of the components of my study system. Using this system, I was able to study for my Master's semester in about 1/6th of the normal estimated time. I was able to achieve High Distinction and my work was categorised as an exemplar.
The focus is on creating that high quality encoding which forms that stable foundation for future learning.
I demonstrate the use of "chunking" which is shown to bypass working memory capacity limitations and how this integrates with "chunkmapping", the variation of mindmapping that I teach. There are also a number of other techniques that I use, which other videos will individually focus on, but this shows an overview of how the system can come together.
The key areas of challenge for beginners doing this are:
- Insecurity at not writing so many notes
- Insecurity at not writing linear notes
- Discomfort from the chunking and encoding process (cognitive load which you may not be used to) - this discomfort can be misinterpreted as bad, whereas it can actually be the total opposite, where the normal, passive learning which was very comfortable was just a waste of time.
- Proper chunkmapping technique
- Evaluating the quality of chunks and chunk structures
- Breaking framing bias when doing syntopical reading
I will endeavour to cover each of these in other videos to come.
Kinda crazy that I always drew connections (analyze) of new things I'm taught sometimes even saying it to the teacher and always got some weird stares from them and got entirely dismissed as playing around...
Edit: Thanks to you I know that
1- I was right all along.
2- That's why I always learned faster and easier than others to the point that I didn't really need to revise anything beyond the classroom to pass.
Thanks for that ❤️
Is chunkmapping just limiting each node in your mindmap to 4 connections?
I see that you only take Australian dollars. I am a student from the US, so are there any possible ways to work out payment with someone for the course on the website?
I love you
Does all that you said comes down to consciously and proactively learning ?
This video was on my WL playlist for like 2 weeks and im not disappointed watching it
Bismillah in the name of Allah. I thank you for sharing your knowledge. I am from Cape Town RSA Republic of South Africa.
My youngest daughter algamdullilah is autistic at the moment.
May Allah bless you and guide you and your family aameen.
Aameen
This method worked for me incredibly, even though I only watched your videos and didn't take any paid classes. I really appreciate what you are doing and sharing this on youtube. Keep up with the great work!
That's impossible.
@@reyoktayhan And why is that? It took me a long time to finally understand how to use what he’s teaching but I recently got it and everything just clicked. If you think that he doesn’t teach you _how_ to do these things, I recommend just watching more and more of his videos (inquisitively!) until you understand everything well and then you will be able to figure out how to use everything pretty easily and intuitively.
@@EragonShadeslayer that's exactly my point. The op's claim that just watching Justin's CZcams videos alone did the trick is simply unrealistic. He even says it in almost all of his content. It takes serious knowledge and effort. I'll need his course to get there and I'd like to think I'm not the only one. I'm excited I found out about him and what he teaches. I only wish the course was available right away. Still over a month of waiting time.😐
@@reyoktayhan ? Like I said, just watching his videos alone has taught me a lot. It just took me like a month or two of watching and rewatching his videos.
@@reyoktayhan I started doing a lot of this stuff before finding his videos and when I give my peers advice/ideas like this it works for them, so it's not impossible to benefit without the course. It's not like it's a magic spell that Justin Sung made up. It's just concepts that already exist and he's explaining them to people who don't know about them.
Really helpful video! I am a 4th year law student that bought into the idea of "active recall, spaced repetition" hype when I was trying to learn how to learn back into 1st year. I did that way religiously and got "okay" results. However, as the concepts became deeper and more complicated through the years, I started falling behind most of my other classmates that don't study as hard yet outperform me greatly. It's also kind of frustrating that alot of the concepts that I learned in 1st year, most of them still remember till 4th year, while I have to constantly refresh these concepts in my head and forgot most of them already. It gets pretty demoralizing ngl.
Recently found your videos and I am still trying to leave the habit of "spaced repetition" techniques and actually incorporate higher cognitive load while I read these truckloads of text. However, I am finding that I am absorbing information and utilizing it much better. Just hope there's enough time before the next big exams for me to utilize these skills. Thank you very much!
Good luck with your studies
I'm also a law student and SAME!!!
Do cliffnotes for Law degrees exist ?
I love your direct and casual filming style
GRACIAS MÁQUINA, TITÁN, DIOS DEL COSMOS, MAESTRO. Me encantaría tomar clases con vos, lastima que todavía no domino el ingles al 100 percent, con los videos me alcanza y me sobra
You are changing my life in such many ways, thanks
Thank you Dr Justin for this showing us this method 💞
Its not just the quality of content, the quality of your video is also rising exponentially!
Omg finally he came with guide video. I was waiting for him without even start studying bcz I don't know how to do it.
Im not studying anything grand at the moment but for my language learning I've started using my anki decks as writing / speaking prompts rather than the usual vocab hell I was used to. It's really nice!!!!!!
I am so glad people are getting to know you Dr Justin! I'm definitely saving up for your course (highkey can't ask my parents to give me money for it) and I cannot wait to enroll when the enrolments open. Thank you
Relatable
literally same
same
Hey khushi, please check it's reviews and all though. Also glad to see Indians doing this shit as well. Rather try limitless though, just 700 and has jim kwik's techniques which have been working quite well for me
omg khushi i found u here hahaha hello fren
I'm starting to caths on this amazing process, there is light at the end of the tunnel, thanks a million!
wow so incredible. it also makes me realize i been using this technique my whole life but because of of stress and not well time management i forgotten this so i going to retake chunking
People like you make me believe I can learn anything :D thank you so much!
Content is gold. Pure gold.
100% agree
Thank you for sharing these insights with us!
The Gem of Efficient learning.....!!!! ❤️❤️❤️
Watched a few of your videos. Good content. The best application of your methods is while watching your videos. A quick preview of any of them will show that the real content is limited to the last 5-6 minutes. Once you get that the whole process of checking out your CZcams content gets much quicker - simply jump to the end and move 6 minutes backward.
I was the type to never learn for any tests ever. Got me through high school just fine, because I was generally interested nd did very active and efficient encoding. I always thought about what we were actually learning, how it related to stuff I already knew (I did watch alot of documentaries and stuff, so I always had prior knowledge). This resulted in me being the person that had the right answer to any question. But due to being 'lazy', I always missed out on alot of points in tests because of not knowing details or keywords. What he is saying put alot of things into perspective. I will use active recall alot in the future, because it seems to be the missing link for me. I will also practice discipline and look at lectures contents before attending them review everything daily, so I never lose track. Studying is a surprisingly interesting topic, I always thought of it as a nuisance, that sure changed.
Awesome technique, taught it was Bull until I actually tried it. make the information much more easier to process.It build your confidence, in that you don't get overwhelmed with all that content as you can see the big picture. It's like having a road map, at first the destination seems far quoting the miles but, seeing the map of the entire journey make it seems more doable.
Hi Justin I must say I find your work fascinating and you have given me light to study efficiently and not give up, when it comes to learning anatomy , bone surface features, muscle origin and insertion how did you personally approach it? Regards!
Justin, thank you! You are helping me a lot!
Saw this on my recommendations, great content here Justin!
You'll watch an entire Netflix show even when the first episodes are slow and boring just because someone told you "it gets better." *But what if you looked at your goals like that and watched your life get better instead?*
shit hes got a point
But then why is it not difficult to watch a Netflix show but it is to work towards your goal?
@@SkeleFang watching a Netflix show doesn't require to actively put in effort into doing something, it's like comparing going to sleep and waking up (if you're not a morning person like me)
Your videos are so good man. Keep it up!
Hello Justin, I just saw a couple of your videos and I was really wondering to learn about your academic background. Whenever you have time we would love to hear about your study journey. :D
I started mind minding 2 weeks ago when i found your video about encoding (wich lead me to watch all of your videos 😃 ).now i'm crying why i’ve never heard about it before . But i’m thankfull that i still have some time in university to practice it well. Thank you so much for your effort 😍🥰
Can u pls explain it, simple manner??
@@glassyclassy3173 watch his other videos if you haven't
Pretty good drawing of a barrel...just off the top of the dome like that..very impressive. Very impressive indeed.
Justin your videos are amazing!
Very good points. Thank you for confirming my thought. I feel some subjects in the university (if not all) are very slow. Subscribed!
Makes studying into an action video. Brilliant!
*"The person who wins, is the person who wants it the most."*
This changed my life.
Love the way you’re walking while filming, it somehow feels cozy for me like I’m talking with a friend of mine :)
Great value Justin Thank you.
00:00 Active recall and space repetition are part of a wider system.
02:46 Proper encoding of information is crucial for effective studying
05:10 Organizing information improves learning speed
07:32 Working through discomfort in learning fuels growth
10:17 Using active chunking to manage and retain information
12:38 Organizing information in chunks improves learning effectiveness
15:12 Higher order learning helps you understand and memorize faster
17:33 Active recall and spaced repetition make memorization easier
I’m a medical student and I have to agree. While Active Recall and Spaced Repetition ARE effective, it shouldn’t be the only techniques you use. Realizing that studying and learning is more than just remembering and getting the right answer on the exam. Short term, AR and SP will be helpful, but in the long term it’s not sustainable so now I’m letting myself fall back to square 1 and learn how study.
Yeah,same here. It impossible to keep up with SR in med school, there’s way too much of content to learn, and constantly repeating it its no no for me :D
Yes! Same and I'm so glad im not alone! Let's do this 💪 🙌
But since there is so much, doing the hole "deeper learning" spiel is pretty unrealistic. If you have a basic understanding of the subject and the things you're learning, actually learning things by heart is not that hard. I don't have time to gain a deep understanding of organic chemistry, I just need to learn what I have to to pass the exam. The content is actually not that complicated, it's just a lot.
@whats up Not really possible if you have 3 other tests on other subject that week. And things like cell biology you can't really get a deep understanding of, because we either don't now the precise mechanisms behind things or that mechanism is completely beyond your understanding of the subject. You just need to know which cells differentiate into what. There is no way or need for you to know why.
@whats up I'm a med student ;) Speaking from experience. And the school system in my country doesn't do standardized testing, so we had to comment on and apply everything in exams. Maybe that's why this seems like a no-brainer concept to me - understanding is always the first step. Never really had an issue with that though.
Passion. I was 17 which my father purchased 1965 vw. With no engine. I learned how cars worked and helped my friends which I was Toyota mechanic until 29. I started jr college majored in psychology and electronics. Today, I surf and am electrician and weekend philosopher and psychologist with friends. Downey California
this is the right way to study other educators in youtube don't give this much clarity... there should be a real life purpose of stuff you study just memorizing is waste of time its not going to get you to the top level of your intentions.. yea you can excel in exam but if there is a single collapse you end up screwed .. Concepts are really important And the passion evolves right there, otherwise our body responds to the facts as a stress
I just overview the theory, read/listen to lectures on it and take notes, make a list of important terms and concepts, then commit to my official notes a few pages of condensed text book style notes reconstructing what I learned as if I was teaching it from a-z. Then throughout the next few weeks I stay engaged with high and low level theory/lectures that expand and detail the processes.
what youtubers or programs would you suggest (no matter the subject field) that expand and explain complex and in-depth materials and format it into applied concepts through experience and process?
Awesome vid. Great info.
Kinda scared rn because this is how I've always studied and, in the other hand, happy because cards and that always felt overwhelming and I always needed to "organize it"
The process you are describing is the one I've had for so long! And to feel that way is not bad, so ig that's great
Justin can you please made a video for Doctors and USMLE exams. Most of the videos are applicable to Engineers & Lawyers but medical entrance exams are completely different from other college
All of your techniques seem to be beneficial. The techniques used to prime your brain and to sustain a level of understanding is what seems to be logical in becoming sufficiently knowledgeable of a new subject to study. I do, however, have a question in the priming stage. After foraging through the text, research books, handbooks, etc., how am I supposed to become cognizant of foreign terms/concepts? Which techniques are available to become a savant; encyclopedic,if you will (gain awareness), before returning to original study? How important is it to learn vocabulary in isolation and how do I isolate those terms and get access to various context? Especially in advanced fields such as psychology/biochemistry/accounting etc? "How does vocab intext, or while learning, help me to become more analytical, instead of just picking up marginal gains throughout the course of learning a topic?"
Justin sir that is good theory explanation can you show us practical how to do it by taking a particular topic and showing how to mind map it so that we can also follow it for our mind map
Hi sung thank you for good video . Can u please add a summary of main at the end of video ?
This is somewhat similar to programming, leaving some blocks of placeholders, and filling them later. You are a architecture!
Basically you learn like how a computer stores and download and install files.
In Chunks and compressed,
then unpacked, install and layed down in bigger size.
Torrents are like this from peers gathered around.
If only my childhood have system like that!
I discovered the channel a couple of days ago. I am very grateful for the wisdom. I have heard of some basics of those things when I was in high school taking AP psychology, but that was long ago and I didn't really take advantage of it. I am no longer in school (at least done with undergraduate anyway) but I still try to learn many computer science/software engineering concepts and starting foreign languages.
When studying things like math problems, where you directly apply what you "should" have learned, I wonder about the best ways to get though those types of learning tasks.
Hi im not an expert in math but im very enthusiastic about it. Firstly, i want you to know that math is not just applying and plugging formulas.
Schools teaches you math by doing steps. However, math isnt just about doing calculations.
The thing is formulas and laws had to come from somewhere. Someone thought of it. So how did this person thought of it? It's by using logic and observing patterns.
A video to show you what i mean by observing patterns:
m.czcams.com/video/r0_mi8ngNnM/video.html
Then there's math conventions. The reason we have these conventions are because of the history behind it.
A good video behind the reason why 1 is not a prime number:
czcams.com/video/IQofiPqhJ_s/video.html
Hope you enjoy the videos and hopefully this enlightened you about math :)
your videos are really funny and useful, thanks!!
How a coach can be this funny u are easy to understand u are nit boring at alll
🤔 I 'm really intriged about this method because is very similar to what I used to do because of my dislexya and needless complicated techinical texts in school.
You motivated me a lot🌹
Thank you doctor sung😍
I'm noticing a lack of motivation to finish my semester strong with my computer science classes as I only know and have been using active retrieval methods without really thinking about breaking them into chunks. This video is very informative and I will definitely give your suggestions a try for next semester classes.
did it work?
How would you apply these techniques into language learning? One way I do it is by associating different letters I must memorize with images and words that first come to mind. But I was wondering is there’s a better way for language learning?
Thank's ❤
This Is the 3rd video, It's absolutely brilliant! I have Observed and I been applied this method and now will Save All from TL DR
After Careful Listening with the proper attentiveness, heed and Diligence of Harvard Graduate, for 19 Minutes, I Have Finally come with direct conclusion of this is just fantastically Spoken, Dianne Sawyer Robert Downey esque Lecture Of Richard Feiiman with plenty of beautifully meaning of words.
Talking about word, the origin of education for the proper writing used to be only enjoyed by the people from class full of fast learning folks. Talking about Feiiman again and again, The proper mind schematics have been passed from teacher to teacher, since decades of education by lecture and or books also now are being taught on internet
Thank me later
I signed up for your course, even though I've only seen a few videos! But my experiences and my thoughts about studying and learning already back up your methods and I can see there is a lot I don't see, so I want to learn it! It's quite obvious your words are not superficial, so far I can link everything to past experiences.
Also, I think I'm in a good position to learn all you have in store for the course because I have different reasons for wanting to learn it, (not just because I want to study better myself) so I'll be automatically looking at things from different perspectives. In my head, I'm paying that annual fee on one hand for my personal development and on another hand I see it as a (fun and interactive) prep course for the cognitive neuroscience courses I'm interested in but am too early in my university career to attend haha. (I'm in my first semester in a Linguistics Bachelor.)
I'm very excited!
how is it so far? the course
@@Lakshay81 I like it very much, even the fundamentals of the course are already very enriching for me which I didn't expect. I had to put it all on hold for a few weels though because I'm going through some personal stuff. But hopefully will be back in gear within the next week. :) I'd love to recommend it but I'd like to first finish one of the levels above the fundamentals and then gush about it freely haha.
@@essennagerry thanks ill join too thn
I love this so much
Thank you! Wish I learnt this at High School. Goodbye to wasteful learning - study time.
Just came back from the [ 4 Reasons Hard Work DOES NOT Beat Talent ] video recommendation, plus this,
became a [ chunking ] , a [ fall back first, admit defeat to win the war ] , and becoming [ more intune and aware by learning more stuff ] to [ link and connect with existing knowledge/ prior ones ]
becomes the [ process ] needed to get higher order learning, which in turn goes back to more [ efficent and proficient ] method of [ chunking ] to work [ absolutely your hardest ] , to get results
Are there any books or articles that support the techniques and the ideas brought up that you would recommend looking into? What about books or articles that advise against solely using spaced repetition and active recall?
Since the techniques are pretty young you won't find many books on the topic more like studies. I advise you try this yourself, and you'll see just how it works. I was sceptical too but when i started practising, this the effects came imidiately.
The active recall and spaced repetition thing killed my brain in uni ngl. Idk how tbh. it worked fine for me in HS but the uni course is so much more complex and vast and heavy and dense, i guess those techniques aren't built for that...I'd suggest you try it yourself, as i am going to do. And see what works for you
@@Sunshine-yk2eg I agree with you. HS is fine with recall and stuff but once things get more complex and some depth in information is required and understanding of connections you'll have hard time. That's why it can seem that tyou need higher intellect to succeed but in reality mastering these techniques will suit you the best.
@@toby2120 at least spaced repetition and active recall are certainly not young techniques. Over 40 years ago I used them for vocabulary learning with study cards. Mind maps themselves as a concept were created in the 90s by Tony Buzan.
@@annvoy7698 but seen from this perspective it's relatively new i mean just try to Google books on this topic not to say that books are good to support his argument. As i said look at studies.
Microretrieval with relational thinking is game changer!
What do you mean by microretreval?
@@bobbobson4030 micro-retrieval means less work on remembering information. The thing is when you have a foundation (core system) of understanding about a certain topic, it's way simpler to remember and apply that certain knowledge.
@@lethinhphong So micro-retrieval simply describes how it's easier to retrieve information after proper encoding?
@@bobbobson4030 yes.
@@bobbobson4030 Microretrieval is: Read a few minutes, think about it, document your thinking onto a mind map without looking back at the reading
Sir your videos are really helpful . 😊😊😊😊
Wow I loved the messy room comparison. I study educational sciences and what you describe here relates very closely to the subsumption theory of David Ausubel, maybe you would like to look it up and read his books on it! I found it extremely interesting to study as the way my brain works finally made sense to me after reading it ☺️
Also, higher cognitive load is not always better. You should find the cognitive load that challenges you, but not overwhelms you, otherwise encoding will become less efficient :)
But as an educational sciences student I can confirm this video is top tier! Great job and I definitely subscribed and look forward to your future videos!
Currently there is a big discussion going in the Anki Subreddit for Justins study technique. Hope Justin addresses some of the concerns there.
Well i havent watched it but as he mentioned in one of his videos, space repetetion is good and a nice way to enter this world or learning methods, but there are way better options since Anki or any other space repetition is passive
Anki is good for recall but you cannot rely solely on memorization. You can use his technique combined with Anki in order to optimize your studying. It is a matter of the utilization of techniques.
@@prestopasta259 yeap as he implied in the video, is better to combine different methods and not only rely on one
3:06 I'm so jealous! I wish I could spend so little time on schoolwork. I try to be as efficient as possible when studying for tests (keeping your instructions in mind) but I also have to finish a lot of assignments that I actually need to do well on because they account for a big percentage of my final grade. Do you (or anyone else) have any tips on how to do complete assignments efficiently: not spending a lot of time (or any more time than neccesary) completing them but still getting a good grade (90-100%)?
Sorry it’s a little late, but I think planning your assignments makes it a lot easier to actually complete, as in I make dot points and questions to answer for every sentence in a essay and make tables to fill out that follow a steel (statement, technique, example, explain, link) structure. Also spending more time focusing on the criteria and the actual question (in an essay) will make it so you get all the marks possible and don’t loose any to something you didn’t know you were meant to complete. I guess it really depends on what kind of assignments your getting but i usually get full marks or At least straight A’s using this (but I’m Australian so the grading isn’t actually harsh: 50-75 is a c, 90+ is a A) good luck on your studies though
@@potatotoes754 no it's ok haha! Thank you, I'll try it out! 😊
Lovely engine choice RB 😁
So the idea is, to put these fundamental concepts or components and create a system that fits the user, or in this case me. Create a high-level study system. Can this be used to review Algebra or Physics in that matter? I have a test in a few weeks and I’m wondering, if I create a system that fits my use case...Will I be able to properly cover and address the material and build a great understanding, within a short period of time? If so, that I think that will be interesting and worthwhile, Great video by the way!
Peace Justin .May Allah give you a good reward.
good luck on da master
Great video. What is your Masters in that your working on?
Once again excellent analysis!! But one point I will like to add here- There is one famous Jaina religion theory of Anekawada which tells that truth is very complex and can have multiple interpretations. Similarly there can't be just one special technique/ method for learning. Deep learning, encoding, active recall etc are all good techniques but their application can vary from subject to subject and person to person. One should Choose what suits him/ her
I'm trying doing a bit of your method for the first time but I feel confused about where to put information, since I'm not writing it. Do you have any advice for beginners?
Awesome vid!
I can't wait to apply to IS (information systems).
I really like the idea of this but I'm still not sure how to apply this technique correctly.
(I'm a highschool student 11. grade from germany) Let's say I'm in biology or physics class and learn something new let's say about how mitochondria work and are structured. How would I apply this technique? I can make connections by saying its a part of the cell and has it's own DNA like chloroplasts. Then I create some sort of mindmap / connection and it helps with learning the connections and relations but I still know nothing about how mitochondria work and stuff like this.
Is the ideal way in this case to use Anki to memorize the isolated informations like the function, structure, ... and then still try to find the relation to other things?
How do I learn things that I need to know a definition of or the way its built?
And what do you think of Apps like Notion or especially Obsidian for the connections?
Another example:
I need to learn formulas in physics for the free fall or sth like this. Should I remember it first and then connect it to other things or how should I be doing it?
HI justin, can you please make a video on studying maths.
That would be great.
Great vid! Whats the app that he uses in order to draw and write? Thanks
Thank you
hello! What app do you use for drawing your mind map? Thank you!
How much time do you spend thinking about what way would be best to order information?
I feel like when I do mind-maps, I can spend hours rearranging information I already know to make it cleaner and thus easier to understand. However, I do feel like it takes me way longer to cover material than what I used to, and I'm not sure rearranging for the 5th time is necessarily helping my retention enough to be worth the time commitment.
Thanks for sharing ..... 🕸️🎉👍👍
does this also apply for a lecture? should we try to do the mindmapping during or after the lecture?